Jacob":3fux27gy said:
Except it never happens does it? First time I've ever heard of it, having been using macs for 20 years or more.
Many Mac users like to cite how long they've been using their Macs for, usually claiming absolutley no need for even
having antivirus, because you 'Can't Hack a Mac'.... In 2012 over 600,000 of them were infected by the Flashback virus, including a friend of mine.
Lets have a quick look at 36 years:
https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2011/1 ... e-history/
And the past couple of years:
https://www.macworld.co.uk/feature/mac- ... y-3668354/
Hell, as if crackpot conspiracy theories about aliens weren't stirring up enough drama, the CIA are purposely coming up with hacks, bypasses and exploits themselves:
https://arstechnica.com/information-tec ... rget-macs/
And we all know how good
they are at keeping dangerous things out of the wrong hands (unless they can make money from selling it)!!
If it is connected to the internet, it can be subjected to hacks, viruses, malware, trojans, zero-day attacks an so on. Apple are quite reasonable at getting fixes out, but not always... and even then, the patches don't always fix things:
https://arstechnica.com/information-tec ... are-hacks/
Jacob":3fux27gy said:
Macs aren't the tiny minority they were - now 12% of all PC sales and rising. That's 5.3 million macs apparently.
And the vulnerabilities, attacks and successes are increasing along with them, as the increased number makes them a more useful target... even brand spanking new Macs:
https://www.cultofmac.com/568993/mac-os ... rise-hack/
Of course, the biggest vulnerability usually exists between the keyboard and chair, and the same social engineering tricks that work on this component of Windows and Android will work on any UNIX, Linux, Ubuntu or Apple OS. :wink: